The mention of "buying usable software" probably makes sense to someone who's used to dealing with Commercial, Off-The-Shelf (COTS) software. We don't live in a world where COTS is necessarily safe anymore. There was a period (which I luckily lived and worked in), where Defense Department ARPA money was being directed specifically to make COTS software more secure and high-assurance. Given the Snowden revelations, however, COTS can possibly be a vulnerability as much as it could be a strength.

In the seminal Frederick Brooks book, The Mythical Man-Month, he describes one approach to software engineering: The Surgical Team. See here and scroll down for a proper description. Note the different roles for such a team.

Given that most media is equivalent to software (easily copied, distributed, etc.), I wonder if media organizations shouldn't adopt certain types of those organizational roles that have been until now the domain of traditional software. In particular, the role of the Toolsmith should be one that modern media organizations adopt. Ignoring traditional functions of "IT", a toolsmith for, say, an investigative organization should be well-versed in what military types like to call Defensive Information Warfare. Beyond just the mere use of encryption (NOTE: ANYONE who equates encryption with security should be shot, or at least distrusted), such Toolsmiths should enable their journalists (who would correspond to the surgeon or the assistant in the surgical team model) to do their job in the face of strong adversaries. An entity that needs a toolsmith will also need a software base, and unless the entity has resources enough to create an entire software stack, that entity will need Free Open-Source Software (for various definitions of Free and Open I won't get into for fear of derailing my point).

I haven't been working in security much since the Solaris Diaspora, so I'm a little out of touch with modern threat environments. I suspect it's everything I'd previous imagined, just more real, and where the word "foreign" can be dropped from "major foreign governments". Anyone who cares about keeping their information and themselves safe should, in my opinion, have at least a toolsmith on their staff. Several organizations do, or at least have technology experts, like the ACLU's Christopher Soghoian, for example. The analogy could probably extend beyond security, but I wanted to at least point out the use of an effective toolsmith.